Global businesses, workers and civil society organisations have called for comprehensive emergency debt relief to enable all countries in need to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.
The G20 Finance Ministers have been urged to build on previous efforts to deliver a truly comprehensive sovereign debt package at their meeting later this week.
In an open letter, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the institutional representative of over 45 million businesses, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), the global voice of the world’s working people, and Global Citizen, a movement of engaged citizens who use their collective voice to end extreme poverty by 2030, made the call, ICC said on Saturday.
The letter builds on an earlier intervention by the global coalition in April in advance of the IMF / World Bank Spring Meetings. Noting the progress made since – including replenishment of the IMF’s Catastrophe Containment and Relief Trust and the establishment of the Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) – the letter calls for an extension of the DSSI to 30 April 2022 and a broadening of its eligibility criteria to encompass lower-middle and middle-income countries.
Making the case for expanding the DSSI just three months after its creation, the three global organizations point to the worsening economic outlook for the global economy – and growing concern that debt burdens may compromise efforts to contain the pandemic and keep local economies afloat.
The letter states that any such plan should be bold enough to address the barriers that sovereign debt burdens present toward pandemic containment—while enabling a global recovery that prioritises health resiliency, decent work and growth of the real economy.”
Joining forces in their call for urgent, coordinated action on debt, John W.H. Denton AO, ICC Secretary General, Sharan Burrow, ITUC General Secretary and Michael Sheldrick, Chief Policy and Government Affairs Officer of Global Citizen also commented on the issue.
“Removing the spectre of sovereign debt from pandemic containment and the economic crisis is an absolute imperative to business, workers and citizens throughout the world. The required investment from the world’s leading economies is minute compared to the social and economic costs of inaction," they said.
Speaking to the concerns of global business, John Denton said there is a clear business case for a new package of debt relief measures – to ensure macro-economic stability, preserve productive capacity, and enable global containment of the pandemic.
Reflecting concerns that the effectiveness of the DSSI may be compromised by the limited participation of multilateral banks and bondholders in such efforts to date, the letter also highlights a number of measures that the G20 could take to enable collective participation from all creditors in providing relief to any country in need as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.
ICC, ITUC, Global Citizen call for greater action by G20 Govts on sovereign debt relief
Global businesses, workers and civil society organisations have called for comprehensive emergency debt relief to enable all countries in need to combat the COVID-19 pandemic.
The G20 Finance Ministers have been urged to build on previous efforts to deliver a truly comprehensive sovereign debt package at their meeting later this week.
In an open letter, the International Chamber of Commerce (ICC), the institutional representative of over 45 million businesses, the International Trade Union Confederation (ITUC), the global voice of the world’s working people, and Global Citizen, a movement of engaged citizens who use their collective voice to end extreme poverty by 2030, made the call, ICC said on Saturday.
The letter builds on an earlier intervention by the global coalition in April in advance of the IMF / World Bank Spring Meetings. Noting the progress made since – including replenishment of the IMF’s Catastrophe Containment and Relief Trust and the establishment of the Debt Service Suspension Initiative (DSSI) – the letter calls for an extension of the DSSI to 30 April 2022 and a broadening of its eligibility criteria to encompass lower-middle and middle-income countries.
Making the case for expanding the DSSI just three months after its creation, the three global organizations point to the worsening economic outlook for the global economy – and growing concern that debt burdens may compromise efforts to contain the pandemic and keep local economies afloat.
The letter states that any such plan should be bold enough to address the barriers that sovereign debt burdens present toward pandemic containment—while enabling a global recovery that prioritises health resiliency, decent work and growth of the real economy.”
Joining forces in their call for urgent, coordinated action on debt, John W.H. Denton AO, ICC Secretary General, Sharan Burrow, ITUC General Secretary and Michael Sheldrick, Chief Policy and Government Affairs Officer of Global Citizen also commented on the issue.
“Removing the spectre of sovereign debt from pandemic containment and the economic crisis is an absolute imperative to business, workers and citizens throughout the world. The required investment from the world’s leading economies is minute compared to the social and economic costs of inaction," they said.
Speaking to the concerns of global business, John Denton said there is a clear business case for a new package of debt relief measures – to ensure macro-economic stability, preserve productive capacity, and enable global containment of the pandemic.
Reflecting concerns that the effectiveness of the DSSI may be compromised by the limited participation of multilateral banks and bondholders in such efforts to date, the letter also highlights a number of measures that the G20 could take to enable collective participation from all creditors in providing relief to any country in need as a result of the coronavirus pandemic.